Colleges Crack Down on CollegeACB.com

Popular college gossip website CollegeACB.com is drawing scrutiny from universities nationwide.

The site serves as the largest college anonymous confession board in the world and allows students to post anything they want about their campuses and classmates.

At Drew University this past semester, a 19-year-old freshman was devastated when she saw her name listed under a "fattest people on campus" blog post. After telling her parents, the family attempted to have the post removed, even filing a complaint with the state attorney general.

Workman says Creighton followed schools such at Pepperdine and Tulane, who also blocked CollegeACB from their servers.

What's new about this current round of protests against the site is that they're coming from college administrators. One student petition has been circulating for close to a year. At James Madison University, in Harrisonburg, Va., last May a student started a petition to ban CollegeACB altogether. It's accumulated almost 600 signatures -- the most recent signings coming from students at Pennsylvania State.

"The administration recognizes that both Greek and non-Greek students are not happy with the website and we applaud their efforts in voicing so," said Jill Shockey, news bureau manager at Penn State's public relations department. "We have over 30,000 students in Greek chapters -- it seems some traffic on that website stems from comments about sororities and fraternities."

In February, Drew University president Robert Weisbuch issued an open letter to students, asking them to boycott CollegeACB, stating, "These postings result in fear, anger, mistrust and shame in individuals who are named."

Student Haunted By CollegeACB Taunts

For sophomore Sage Burke-Cabados, he says the taunting on CollegeACB led to his transfer out of Oakland University in Rochester, Mich., this year.

"It's one thing to have people say bad stuff about you, but when it's all over the Internet and everyone can see it, I just realized I needed to get away from there," Burke-Cabados told ABCNews.com.

The 20-year-old health fitness major said classmates would post comments using Cabados's full name, calling him "man whore" and "fag." He says as a photographer he spent a lot of time at social events taking pictures where "everybody knew his name."

"I have a unique name. I think that adds to it -- people can easily remember my name and post it on the site," Cabados said."Sometimes I think to myself, 'If I didn't have that name...'"

They'd even make fun of his fraternity.

"Comments were completely made up -- some of them so outrageous it made me laugh," Cabados said.

Nevertheless, he added, "They liked to hit me where it hurts."

The posts got so bad that he transferred to Central Michigan University to finish school. But even there, he says, the "hatefulness" continues.